Byers v. Alcorn

6 Ill. App. 39, 1880 Ill. App. LEXIS 15
CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedApril 2, 1880
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 6 Ill. App. 39 (Byers v. Alcorn) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Appellate Court of Illinois primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Byers v. Alcorn, 6 Ill. App. 39, 1880 Ill. App. LEXIS 15 (Ill. Ct. App. 1880).

Opinion

Wall, J.

Byers & Boody were a firm, composed of Alexander L. Byers and George W. Boody; and A. L. & E. Byers were a firm, composed of the said Alexander L. Byers and Eobert Byers, the plaintiff in error, who was the defendant in the court below. On the 9th day of December, 1874, the firm of Byers & Boody borrowed of E. J. McKenney & Co., of Vincennes, Indiana, the sum of 02,000, and gave their promissory note for that amount, and of that date, payable ninety days after date, at the Vincennes Deposit Bank, Vincennes, Indiana, with interest at the rate of ten per cent, from date until paid, and providing that, if the note should be collected by suit, the judgment should include the reasonable fee of the plaintiff’s attorney. Before this note was delivered to E. J. McKenney & Co., the name of the firm of A. L. & E. Byers was added as surety, and, also, the name of William E. Alcorn, the defendant in error, and the complainant in*the court below. The relation of these different parties to the note, then, was: Byers & Boody, principals, A. L. & E. Byers, sureties, and William E. Alcorn, surety.

A suit was brought on this note to the April term, 1875, of the Richland Circuit Court, against the firm of Byers & Boody, and A. L. & R. Byers, and William E. Alcorn, and a judgment was recovered against all the defendants, except Robert Byers, for the sum of $2,018.34, damages, and $125, attorneys’ fee, and $29.50, costs of suit; which judgment was paid by William E. Alcorn, the defendant in error, on the 16th day of June, 1875, and amounted at that time to the sum of $2,166.10. Alexander L. Byers died about February 1, 1877.

On the 6th day of April, 1875, Alexander L. Byers and Robert Byers, as individuals, and as the firm of A. L. & R. Byers, on their own petition, were adjudged voluntary bankrupts by the District Court of the United States for the Southern District of Illinois. Afterwards, on the 18th day of May, 1875, at a meeting of their creditors, called and held for that purpose, they proposed a composition with all their creditors, partnership and individual; which composition was accepted by a unanimous vote of the individual creditors of ‘Alexander L. Byers and Robert Byers, and the creditors of the firm of A. L. & R. Byers there present; and afterwards, on the 12th day of June, 1875, the said composition was approved and confirmed, on due notice to all creditors, by the decree of said District Court, and was made binding by said decree, on all the individual creditors of Alexander L. Byers and Robert Byers, and all the partnership creditors of the firm of A. L. & R. Byers, whose names and addresses, and the amounts of debts due to whom, are shown in the statement of assets and debts exhibited by said bankrupts, at the meeting held for the purpose of said composition.

On these facts, the defendant in error, William E. Alcorn, filed his bill in chancery, in the Richland Circuit Court, against the plaintiff in error, Robert Byers, at the April term, 1877, alleging the insolvency of the firm of Byers & Boody, and of the estate of Alexander L. Byers, and praying for a decree against the said Robert Byers, as a co-surety on the said note to R. J. McKenney & Co., for contribution, as to one half of the sum of money paid in satisfaction of the judgment recovered on said note. A decree was rendered as prayed, by the Circuit Court of Richland county, and the defendant below, the plaintiff in error here, brings the record to this court, and assigns the rendition of said decree as error.

The important question to be considered is whether by virtue of the bankruptcy proceedings, Robert Byers has been so far discharged of all liability in reference to this note and the matters growing out of it, as to relieve him from the duty of contributing to his co-surety, Alcorn, who has paid the whole debt. The' discharge in this case is to A. L. & R. Byers, as partners and individuals, and relieves them of their indebtedness to all their creditors- “ whose names addresses, and the amounts due to whom are shown in the statement of debts and assests” exhibited by the bankrupts at the meeting of the creditors held for the purpose of composition. Was the plaintiff in error, Robert Byers, discharged of his liability to the payee of the note — and if so, was he thereby discharged of the subsequently arising demand of Alcorn for contribution? In the statement of assets and debts presented at said creditors’ meeting, the principal debt was described as a note payable to u R. J. McKenney, Yin., Ind.” The payee of the note was the firm of R. J. McKenney & Co., composed of five persons, R. J. McKenney and four others. We are inclined to hold the contraction Yin. Ind. might be taken to indicate Yincennes, Indiana, more especially as the parties all reside near that place, and would, and doubtless did so understand the contraction. We can readily see that it might convey to their minds a sufficient knowledge of the address, and while the same may have been true in this instance as to the name of the creditor, yet we are hardly prepared to say so, and are disposed to think there was not a sufficient statement of the name of payee of the ■note as to discharge Robert Byers of his liability to him. This, however, is not a controversy between Byers and the payee of the note; it is between him and his co-surety, Alcorn. There was no statement showing that Alcorn was a creditor of A. L. & R. Byers as individuals or partners. There was nothing in the statement showing the assets and debts of A. L. & R, Byers that indicated Alcorn as their creditor, or that gave his address or the amount due him. Indeed, we do not understand ^hat the position is assumed by plaintiff in error, that such was the case.

The answer of the defendant avers “ that the name, address and amount due E„ J. McKenney & Co. appear on the statement of assets and debts referred to in the decree of discharge, and that complainant had due notice of the proceedings in bankruptcy, and had an opportunity to set up any claim that he might have had against the defendant, and that prior to the payment of the debt the whole matter had been adjudicated by the Bankrupt Court, and the defendant discharged of all liability in respect to said note in equity as well as in law,” so that the defense is placed upon the ground that the name and address of B, J. McKenney & Co. appear in the statement of assets and debts, and not upon any pretense that the name and address of Alcorn, and the amount due him as a creditor, appear in said statement. The only theory upon which the defense can be predicated, is that by reason of Byers being discharged of his liability to the payee of the note he is also discharged of his duty to contribute to his co-surety, who subsequently paid the whole debt. We think it very clear that Alcorn was not a creditor of Byers at the time of this creditors5 meeting, nor at the time of the discharge, and if he ever had a claim against him which could have been proven in bankruptcy, it was contingent and had not then matured. The bankrupt law recognizes the distinction between actual and contingent liabilities, and there is a provision (Sec. 5068) by which in all cases of contingent debts and liabilities contracted by the bankrupt, the claim may be proven up with the right to share in dividends, if the contingency happens before the final dividend, or the present value of the liability may be ascertained and liquidated, which shall then be done in such manner as the court may order, and the amount so ascertained may be proven.

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188 Ill. App. 70 (Appellate Court of Illinois, 1914)

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Bluebook (online)
6 Ill. App. 39, 1880 Ill. App. LEXIS 15, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/byers-v-alcorn-illappct-1880.